Woman Reading a Letter (Metsu)

Woman Reading a Letter is an oil painting by Gabriël Metsu made in the mid-1660s, shortly before Metsu's death. During his lifetime, under the Golden Age of Dutch painting Metsu was a renowned painter, much better known than Vermeer.[1] It is assumed to be a pair with Man Writing a Letter.

Woman Reading a Letter
ArtistGabriël Metsu
Yearmid-1660s
CatalogueNGI.4537
TypeOil on wood panel
Dimensions52.5 cm × 40.2 cm (20.7 in × 15.8 in)
LocationNational Gallery of Ireland, Dublin

The pair of paintings are regarded as some of Metsu's best-known works; Metsu got the idea of a pair of themed paintings from Gerard ter Borch, who had painted a similar pair. It has been in the collection of the National Gallery of Ireland in Dublin since 1987.

Description

A woman is reading a letter, seated by a window with a blue curtain. She is dressed elegantly in a yellow jacket with an expensive collar of ermine, and a skirt of peach-colored silk; there is gold trim on both the skirt and the elegant shoe she has kicked off.[2] The red and blue embroidery pillow on her lap and the sewing basket next to her show that she put her needlework aside to read the letter. Beside her, a maid in dark clothing is drawing aside a curtain in front of a painting of a naval scene in an ebony frame. Visual clues would have made it immediately apparent to Metsu's contemporaries that the letter is a love letter. The little spaniel symbolizes fidelity and loyalty, the Cupid's arrows on the bucket and the maid's old shoes symbolize love and hope for a safe return.[3]

The painting, showing a stormy sea, could refer to a tumultuous relationship[2] or indicate that the loved one is on the sea. A final, striking detail is found in the letter the maid is holding: it is addressed to the painter.[4][5]

Woman Reading a Letter is a companion piece to Man Writing a Letter, in which the young man is writing the letter. Records indicate the paintings have always been owned as a pair. Metsu likely got the idea for a pair of themed paintings from Gerard ter Borch, who had painted a similar pair, Man Writing a Letter and A Woman Sealing a Letter,[4] but the influence of Johannes Vermeer is also unmistakable in the paintings themselves.[2][6][7]

History

The pair of paintings were owned by Hendrick Sorgh, a broker in Amsterdam. After his death they were sold for 560 guilders on 28 March 1720 to George Bruyn.[8] After he in turn died they were sold on 16 March 1724 for 785 guilders to Johannes Coop, a wealthy cotton printer and dyer. Approximately between 1744 and 1750, for 500 guilders, they came into the possession of Gerrit Braamcamp, a collector who owned no fewer than ten works by Metsu; his heirs benefited from the artist's popularity.[9] On 31 July 1771 the two paintings were bought for 5,205 guilders by Jan Hope. In 1898, his descendant Duke Francis Pelham-Clinton-Hope, 8th Duke of Newcastle, sold his entire collection, including the two Metsu paintings, to art dealers Wertheimer and Colnaghi & Co. in London. The pair of paintings were inherited by Sir Alfred Beit, of London and Blessington. Both were among artworks stolen from Russborough House in 1974 and again in 1986, but were eventually recovered.[10] In 1987 both paintings were donated to the National Gallery of Ireland, though they remained missing until 1993.[10]

Reception

The pair of paintings are commonly regarded as some of Metsu's best work; reviewing an exhibition of works by Metsu in The New York Times in 2011, Karen Rosenberg called them "stunning",[11] and Susan Stamberg of NPR described them as "gorgeously painted with fabulous technique and meticulously rendered details".[2]

gollark: Maybe it was just running a ton of software and some of it had some unpatched security holes (it's a big space station), who knows.
gollark: And yet R2D2 could trivially meddle with the death star.
gollark: I think they just needed something or other to access the physical disk.
gollark: Modern crypto is EXTREMELY hard to break, or it would not be very useful.
gollark: Unlikely.

References

  1. "Gabriel Metsu the Dutch master you dont know". npr.org. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  2. Susan Stamberg, "Gabriel Metsu: The Dutch Master You Don't Know", Morning Edition, NPR, May 18, 2011.
  3. "Superstitions and Symbolism of Shoes". www.symbolic-meanings.com. Retrieved 10 September 2014.
  4. Peter C. Sutton, Lisa Vergara, Ann Jensen Adams, Love Letters: Dutch Genre Paintings in the Age of Vermeer, London: Frances Lincoln Limited, 2003, pp. 13233.
  5. Sara Donaldson, National Gallery of Ireland, Companion Guide, London, 2009. p. 27
  6. Adriaan E. Waiboer, Gabriel Metsu (16291667): Life and Work, PhD dissertation, New York University, School of Fine Arts, 2007: ProQuest, pp. 22530.
  7. "Curator in the spotlight: Adriaan E. Waiboer, National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin", Codart, retrieved September 12, 2014.
  8. Waiboer, p. 255.
  9. Waiboer, pp. 13-14.
  10. "Provenance", Man Writing a Letter and Woman Reading a Letter, National Gallery of Ireland online collection, retrieved September 11, 2014.
  11. Karen Rosenberg, "Inspiring Comparisons with Vermeer", The New York Times, April 28, 2011.
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